The whole thing stands on shaky ground, however. $CASHCAT carries a market value of about $105 million against roughly $6.6 million of liquidity in its Uniswap pool, meaning it may not absorb even a fraction of the holders trying to leave at once.
The token is down about 12% over 24 hours and roughly a quarter off the intraday peak near $145 million it touched on Wednesday, and sell volume has edged past buy volume, $29.1 million against $28.9 million, across more than 30,000 transactions from about 6,800 traders.

Robinhood did not create the token. $CASHCAT‘s own website describes it as “fan fiction with a ticker,” a project built by outsiders around the cat-with-cash logo the company used in its earliest days before rebranding. The utility, the site says, “is cat.”
https://t.co/xInQZoj2jx pic.twitter.com/5rs2Ki2Ocy
— Vlad Tenev (@vladtenev) April 14, 2021
Interestingly, on July 2, the day after the chain went live, Robinhood’s chief executive Vlad Tenev told CNBC that memecoins were largely a dead end, as ‘assets without utility do not serve a lasting purpose,’ and that tokenized real-world assets were the durable direction for crypto.
However, days later on July 7, as $CASHCAT climbed, he posted on X that while the company is building its chain to be the best for real-world assets, “it works great for memes too.” He also followed the token’s account.

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